Mutations in the NPHS2gene, which encodes the podocyte slit diaphragm protein podocin, cause autosomal recessive steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man [OMIM] #600995). Basic research and clinical studies have provided important insights about genotype-phenotype correlations. This knowledge allows personalized genetic (risk) counseling and should lead to changes in the advice given to patients. A patient who carries the R229Q variant (which has a high allele frequency of 3.7% in the European population) in combination with a pathogenic variant in exon 7 or 8 is at high risk for developing nephrotic syndrome that may not manifest before adulthood, whereas a patient with 2 pathogenic variants will develop congenital or childhood-onset nephrotic syndrome. In contrast, a patient who carries the R229Q variant in combination with a pathogenic variant in exons 1 to 6 is unlikely to develop nephrotic syndrome. In this article, we review the emerging knowledge about the NPHS2gene and translate these findings from the bench to practical advice for the clinical bedside.